The slide into the cabinet kind, and if your pets are smart.. add a latch! The tilt out are too easy for a smart dog to figure out, but you could have a latch on that, too. There's nothing more not-fabulous at the end of a hard day than a bag full of trash strewn across the house!

What Houzz contributors are saying:

1. Use uniformity. Rather than a random mix of materials, line up bulk ingredients in glass jars. You'll be better on the earth and better on the eye. This wall is so sleek and keeps what the cook needs within an easy arm's reach.

Style Secret: Recycling Made SimpleGood habits are easier to adopt when you make them as painless as possible. Set up a recycling center in an easy-to-access spot, such as the kitchen, garage or mudroom, to make sorting plastic, paper and glass second nature. There are plenty of ready-made systems on the market, including some that tuck away behind cabinets, but you also can mix and match bins and receptacles to design your own. Put it into practice: Look for opportunities to reuse household items that aren't going out to the curb. Perhaps old magazines can be used as wrapping paper or decoupaged onto vases and boxes; empty jars might hold craft supplies or corral silverware at casual cookouts; the last dregs of paint in the can could be splashed onto a canvas for DIY artwork. And don't forget to take advantage of community programs for recycling electronics, hazardous waste and other items beyond everyday discards.

Original packaging is hardly ever attractive and is often messy. Empty staples that will be stored on open shelving into glass jars. In this example the repeated use of glass gives the display a cohesive look, while variation in the shape and size of jars from one shelf to the next keeps things interesting.
While most packaging is unattractive, groupings of a few products with vivid, visually interesting labels (imported tomatoes etc) can provide a decorative element. The Pellegrino water in the previous picture is a good example.